01-21-2013 08:58 PM - edited 01-21-2013 09:06 PM
He went from the guitar player in the Fabulous Thunderbirds jamming like this:
To this guy who plucks weirdly:
I love the blues, but this is dam hard to listen to.
01-21-2013 09:35 PM
You can always tell the helmet wearers who can't tell the difference between blues-rock and blues.
01-21-2013 09:44 PM
I agree, I love his T-Birds stuff but his playing now seems too choppy for me, if you get what im saying.
01-21-2013 10:56 PM
I havent liked his playing for years.
01-21-2013 11:04 PM
Maturity takes it's own time.
01-22-2013 03:58 AM - edited 01-22-2013 04:00 AM
His Thunderbird days are ages ago.
What happened to Jimmy Vaughan is his brother Stevie died in 1990 and he became an instant multi-millionaire. This coincides with the end of his days with the Thunderbirds.
As a result Jimmy did not have to grind out all those gigs playing music he didn't like anymore.
I personally really like his solo stuff but it is never going to be commercially popular. He is now rich and doesn't have to worry about it.
01-22-2013 04:05 AM
i lyk the music a lot
01-22-2013 04:47 AM
i really enjoy what Jimmy Vaughan does now.
01-22-2013 05:12 AM
01-22-2013 05:27 AM
01-22-2013 07:51 AM
01-22-2013 08:02 AM
I've read interviews where people say that in the early and mid 70's Jimmy was "the meanest guitar player you ever saw with a Les Paul and a shag haircut". I have seen or heard no evidence to support this claim to date, but the difference between today and the FTB stuff would seem a logical conclusion to his progression.
01-23-2013 05:44 PM
Jimmy James wrote:You can always tell the helmet wearers who can't tell the difference between blues-rock and blues.
You're so fake and such an ass kisser. Then again, you're in that business.
01-23-2013 05:46 PM
joshmac wrote:I agree, I love his T-Birds stuff but his playing now seems too choppy for me, if you get what im saying.
Exactly, he's consistently muting notes and doing this floppy finger crap like he's being showy instead of really laying something down.
01-23-2013 05:47 PM
Jimmy James wrote:Maturity takes it's own time.
Ok, you need to lay down the pipe and get some help.
01-23-2013 05:52 PM
Virgman wrote:His Thunderbird days are ages ago.
What happened to Jimmy Vaughan is his brother Stevie died in 1990 and he became an instant multi-millionaire. This coincides with the end of his days with the Thunderbirds.
As a result Jimmy did not have to grind out all those gigs playing music he didn't like anymore.
I personally really like his solo stuff but it is never going to be commercially popular. He is now rich and doesn't have to worry about it.
You really like it? Ok, how many of his new cds do you own? I enjoy many artists that are not comercially popular and many that are millionaires. Neither went from being a fluid guitar player to a plucker like this.
01-23-2013 05:54 PM
Yer Blues wrote:Sounds good to me. From the way you were talking I thought it was going to be horrible or something.
You didn't actually watch the videos did you? No way that second video is good, it's sad.
01-23-2013 05:55 PM
Flogger59 wrote:I've read interviews where people say that in the early and mid 70's Jimmy was "the meanest guitar player you ever saw with a Les Paul and a shag haircut". I have seen or heard no evidence to support this claim to date, but the difference between today and the FTB stuff would seem a logical conclusion to his progression.
I agree, and his biggest supporter was Stevie.
01-23-2013 07:14 PM
mikesr1963 wrote:
Jimmy James wrote:Maturity takes it's own time.
Ok, you need to lay down the pipe and get some help.
He's made an artistic choice based on what he likes in blues players from a few generations earlier, but you assume he sucks. Your ignorance and the ignorance of a few other people in this thread of blues styles, is on full display here.
I'm sure he could find a guitar pick somewhere and sound like every other blues hack if he wanted to, like when he was in the T-Birds. It wouldn't be that hard. It's an artistic choice that you don't agree with. Deal with it. Beer commerical blues is not real blues.
01-23-2013 07:55 PM
Jimmy James wrote:He's made an artistic choice based on what he likes in blues players from a few generations earlier,...
this. and it's damn hard to do. the guitarist in my last band played in that 50s style and it was just so cool. always tasteful, and NO-ONE else in town plays like that. because they can't.
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